Leopoldo López’s Cousin: Opposition Martyr Still a Thorn in Chavismo’s Side

The president of the Human Rights Foundation, Thor Halvorssen, also happens to be the first cousin of Leopoldo López — the jailed opposition leader in Venezuela — and he is more than familiar with the viciousness of the Chavistaregime.

As he notes, HRF represents people from all over the world, but his own parents were victims of political oppression in Venezuela — prior to the rise of Chavismo — so this particular episode is more personal to him.

Regarding López’s incarceration, Halvorssen notes a litany of condemnation from various human rights advocacy groups, in addition to his own, including Human Rights Watch. They cite no evidence against him and obvious political motives.

However, the Chavistas are “absolutely not” going to release him, Halvorssen says, since Nicolás Maduro and Diosdado Cabello, president of the National Assembly, are dead set on punishing him. The fact that they held his hearing on a bus — what an embarrassment — says it all.

At this point, his big concern is that the Chavista regime will establish a permanent stranglehold on power, since they’ve already eliminated term limits and taken control of the courts. Further, “there is no free press in Venezuela” to hold these people accountable, and that is according to “every major [free press] organization from across the spectrum.”

“Everyone is entitled to an opinion … but you’re not entitled to your own set of facts.” And he accuses the apologists of doublespeak that muddies the water of coverage.

He then identified Eva Golinger specifically, after her own appearance on the network, as a paid agent of the Venezuelan government. Even her office, he says, is inside the Venezuelan Foreign Ministry. She also violates the Foreign Agent Registration Act, given that she does not sign up as a lobbyist, which is what her paycheck affirms.

The endgame, according to Halvorssen, is a matter of economics, given the ineptitude of those in power. They promote based on loyalty to the “revolution” rather than any matter of merit, and Venezuela already has the world’s highest inflation rate and severe shortages of basic necessities. This means that tension is only going to rise, as those in power play favoritism amid worsening conditions.